Allan Quatermain

CHAPTER VII
A SLAUGHTER GRIM AND GREAT

Then there was a pause, and we stood there in the chilly
silent darkness waiting till the moment came to start. It was, perhaps,
the most trying time of all -- that slow, slow quarter of an hour. The
minutes seemed to drag along with leaden feet, and the quiet, the solemn
hush, that brooded over all -- big, as it were, with a coming fate, was
most oppressive to the spirits. I once remember having to get up before
dawn to see a man hanged, and I then went through a very similar set of
sensations, only in the present instance my feelings were animated by that
more vivid and personal element which naturally appertains rather to the
person to be operated on than to the most sympathetic spectator. The
solemn faces of the men, well aware that the short passage of an hour would
mean for some, and perhaps all of them, the last great passage to the
unknown or oblivion; the bated whispers in which they spoke; even Sir
Henry's continuous and thoughtful examination of his woodcutter's axe and
the fidgety way in which Good kept polishing his eyeglass, all told the
same tale of nerves stretched pretty nigh to breaking-point. Only
Umslopogaas, leaning as usual upon Inkosi-kaas and taking an occasional
pinch of snuff, was to all appearance perfectly and completely unmoved.
Nothing could touch his iron nerves.

The moon went down. For a long while she had been
getting nearer and nearer to the horizon. Now she finally sank and left
the world in darkness save for a faint grey tinge in the eastern sky that
palely heralded the dawn.

Mr Mackenzie stood, watch in hand, his wife clinging to
his arm and striving to stifle her sobs.

'Twenty minutes to four,' he said, 'it ought to be light
enough to attack at twenty minutes past four. Captain Good had better be
moving, he will want three or four minutes' start.'

Good gave one final polish to his eyeglass, nodded to us
in a jocular sort of way -- which I could not help feeling it must have
cost him something to muster up -- and, ever polite, took off his
steel-lined cap to Mrs Mackenzie and started for his position at the head
of the kraal, to reach which he had to make a detour by some paths known to
the natives.

Just then one of the boys came in and reported that
everybody in the Masai camp, with the exception of the two sentries who
were walking up and down in front of the respective entrances, appeared to
be fast asleep. Then the rest of us took the road. First came the guide,
then Sir Henry, Umslopogaas, the Wakwafi Askari, and Mr Mackenzie's two
mission natives armed with long spears and shields. I followed immediately
after with Alphonse and five natives all armed with guns, and Mr Mackenzie
brought up the rear with the six remaining natives.

The cattle kraal where the Masai were camped lay at the
foot of the hill on which the house stood, or, roughly speaking, about
eight hundred yards from the Mission buildings. The first five hundred
yards of this distance we traversed quietly indeed, but at a good pace;
after that we crept forward as silently as a leopard on his prey, gliding
like ghosts from bush to bush and stone to stone. When I had gone a little
way I chanced to look behind me, and saw the redoubtable Alphonse
staggering along with white face and trembling knees, and his rifle, which
was at full cock, pointed directly at the small of my back. Having halted
and carefully put the rifle at 'safety', we started again, and all went
well till we were within one hundred yards or so of the kraal, when his
teeth began to chatter in the most aggressive way.

'If you don't stop that I will kill you,' I whispered
savagely; for the idea of having all our lives sacrificed to a
tooth-chattering cook was too much for me. I began to fear that he would
betray us, and heartily wished we had left him behind.

'But, monsieur, I cannot help it,' he answered, 'it is
the cold.'

Here was a dilemma, but fortunately I devised a plan.
In the pocket of the coat I had on was a small piece of dirty rag that I
had used some time before to clean a gun with. 'Put this in your mouth,' I
whispered again, giving him the rag; 'and if I hear another sound you are a
dead man.' I knew that that would stifle the clatter of his teeth. I must
have looked as if I meant what I said, for he instantly obeyed me, and
continued his journey in silence.

Then we crept on again.

At last we were within fifty yards of the kraal.
Between us and it was an open space of sloping grass with only one mimosa
bush and a couple of tussocks of a sort of thistle for cover. We were still
hidden in fairly thick bush. It was beginning to grow light. The stars
had paled and a sickly gleam played about the east and was reflected on the
earth. We could see the outline of the kraal clearly enough, and could
also make out the faint glimmer of the dying embers of the Masai
camp-fires. We halted and watched, for the sentry we knew was posted at the
opening. Presently he appeared, a fine tall fellow, walking idly up and
down within five paces of the thorn-stopped entrance. We had hoped to catch
him napping, but it was not to be. He seemed particularly wide awake. If
we could not kill that man, and kill him silently, we were lost. There we
crouched and watched him. Presently Umslopogaas, who was a few paces ahead
of me, turned and made a sign, and next second I saw him go down on his
stomach like a snake, and, taking an opportunity when the sentry's head was
turned, begin to work his way through the grass without a sound.

The unconscious sentry commenced to hum a little tune,
and Umslopogaas crept on. He reached the shelter of the mimosa bush
unperceived and there waited. Still the sentry walked up and down.
Presently he turned and looked over the wall into the camp. Instantly the
human snake who was stalking him glided on ten yards and got behind one of
the tussocks of the thistle-like plant, reaching it as the Elmoran turned
again. As he did so his eye fell upon this patch of thistles, and it
seemed to strike him that it did not look quite right. He advanced a pace
towards it -- halted, yawned, stooped down, picked up a little pebble and
threw it at it. It hit Umslopogaas upon the head, luckily not upon the
armour shirt. Had it done so the clink would have betrayed us. Luckily,
too, the shirt was browned and not bright steel, which would certainly have
been detected. Apparently satisfied that there was nothing wrong, he then
gave over his investigations and contented himself with leaning on his
spear and standing gazing idly at the tuft. For at least three minutes did
he stand thus, plunged apparently in a gentle reverie, and there we lay in
the last extremity of anxiety, expecting every moment that we should be
discovered or that some untoward accident would happen. I could hear
Alphonse's teeth going like anything on the oiled rag, and turning my head
round made an awful face at him. But I am bound to state that my own heart
was at much the same game as the Frenchman's castanets, while the
perspiration was pouring from my body, causing the wash-leather-lined shirt
to stick to me unpleasantly, and altogether I was in the pitiable state
known by schoolboys as a 'blue fright'.

At last the ordeal came to an end. The sentry glanced
at the east, and appeared to note with satisfaction that his period of duty
was coming to an end -- as indeed it was, once and for all -- for he rubbed
his hands and began to walk again briskly to warm himself.

The moment his back was turned the long black snake
glided on again, and reached the other thistle tuft, which was within a
couple of paces of his return beat.

Back came the sentry and strolled right past the tuft,
utterly unconscious of the presence that was crouching behind it. Had he
looked down he could scarcely have failed to see, but he did not do so.

He passed, and then his hidden enemy erected himself,
and with outstretched hand followed in his tracks.

A moment more, and, just as the Elmoran was about to
turn, the great Zulu made a spring, and in the growing light we could see
his long lean hands close round the Masai's throat. Then followed a
convulsive twining of the two dark bodies, and in another second I saw the
Masai's head bent back, and heard a sharp crack, something like that of a
dry twig snapping, and he fell down upon the ground, his limbs moving
spasmodically.

Umslopogaas had put out all his iron strength and broken
the warrior's neck.

For a moment he knelt upon his victim, still gripping
his throat till he was sure that there was nothing more to fear from him,
and then he rose and beckoned to us to advance, which we did on all fours,
like a colony of huge apes. On reaching the kraal we saw that the Masai
had still further choked this entrance, which was about ten feet wide -- no
doubt in order to guard against attack -- by dragging four or five tops of
mimosa trees up to it. So much the better for us, I reflected; the more
obstruction there was the slower would they be able to come through. Here
we separated; Mackenzie and his party creeping up under the shadow of the
wall to the left, while Sir Henry and Umslopogaas took their stations one
on each side of the thorn fence, the two spearmen and the Askari lying down
in front of it. I and my men crept on up the right side of the kraal,
which was about fifty paces long.

When I was two-thirds up I halted, and placed my men at
distances of four paces from one another, keeping Alphonse close to me,
however. Then I peeped for the first time over the wall. It was getting
fairly light now, and the first thing I saw was the white donkey, exactly
opposite to me, and close by it I could make out the pale face of little
Flossie, who was sitting as the lad had described, some ten paces from the
wall. Round her lay many warriors, sleeping. At distances all over the
surface of the kraal were the remains of fires, round each of which slept
some five-and-twenty Masai, for the most part gorged with food. Now and
then a man would raise himself, yawn, and look at the east, which was
turning primrose; but none got up. I determined to wait another five
minutes, both to allow the light to increase, so that we could make better
shooting, and to give Good and his party -- of whom we could see or hear
nothing -- every opportunity to make ready.

The quiet dawn began to throw her ever-widening mantle
over plain and forest and river -- mighty Kenia, wrapped in the silence of
eternal snows, looked out across the earth -- till presently a beam from
the unrisen sun lit upon his heaven-kissing crest and purpled it with
blood; the sky above grew blue, and tender as a mother's smile; a bird
began to pipe his morning song, and a little breeze passing through the
bush shook down the dewdrops in millions to refresh the waking world.
Everywhere was peace and the happiness of arising strength, everywhere save
in the heart of cruel man!

Suddenly, just as I was nerving myself for the signal,
having already selected my man on whom I meant to open fire -- a great
fellow sprawling on the ground within three feet of little Flossie --
Alphonse's teeth began to chatter again like the hoofs of a galloping
giraffe, making a great noise in the silence. The rag had dropped out in
the agitation of his mind. Instantly a Masai within three paces of us
woke, and, sitting up, gazed about him, looking for the cause of the sound.
Moved beyond myself, I brought the butt-end of my rifle down on to the pit
of the Frenchman's stomach. This stopped his chattering; but, as he
doubled up, he managed to let off his gun in such a manner that the bullet
passed within an inch of my head.

There was no need for a signal now. From both sides of
the kraal broke out a waving line of fire, in which I myself joined,
managing with a snap shot to knock over my Masai by Flossie, just as he was
jumping up. Then from the top end of the kraal there rang an awful yell,
in which I rejoiced to recognize Good's piercing notes rising clear and
shrill above the din, and in another second followed such a scene as I have
never seen before nor shall again. With an universal howl of terror and
fury the brawny crowd of savages within the kraal sprang to their feet,
many of them to fall again beneath our well-directed hail of lead before
they had moved a yard. For a moment they stood undecided, and then hearing
the cries and curses that rose unceasingly from the top end of the kraal,
and bewildered by the storm of bullets, they as by one impulse rushed down
towards the thorn-stopped entrance. As they went we kept pouring our fire
with terrible effect into the thickening mob as fast as we could load. I
had emptied my repeater of the ten shots it contained and was just
beginning to slip in some more when I bethought me of little Flossie.
Looking up, I saw that the white donkey was lying kicking, having been
knocked over either by one of our bullets or a Masai spear-thrust. There
were no living Masai near, but the black nurse was on her feet and with a
spear cutting the rope that bound Flossie's feet. Next second she ran to
the wall of the kraal and began to climb over it, an example which the
little girl followed. But Flossie was evidently very stiff and cramped, and
could only go slowly, and as she went two Masai flying down the kraal
caught sight of her and rushed towards her to kill her. The first fellow
came up just as the poor little girl, after a desperate effort to climb the
wall, fell back into the kraal. Up flashed the great spear, and as it did
so a bullet from my rifle found its home in the holder's ribs, and over he
went like a shot rabbit. But behind him was the other man, and, alas, I had
only that one cartridge in the magazine! Flossie had scrambled to her feet
and was facing the second man, who was advancing with raised spear. I
turned my head aside and felt sick as death. I could not bear to see him
stab her. Glancing up again, to my surprise I saw the Masai's spear lying
on the ground, while the man himself was staggering about with both hands
to his head. Suddenly I saw a puff of smoke proceeding apparently from
Flossie, and the man fell down headlong. Then I remembered the Derringer
pistol she carried, and saw that she had fired both barrels of it at him,
thereby saving her life. In another instant she had made an effort, and
assisted by the nurse, who was lying on the top, had scrambled over the
wall, and I knew that she was, comparatively speaking, safe.

All this takes time to tell, but I do not suppose that
it took more than fifteen seconds to enact. I soon got the magazine of the
repeater filled again with cartridges, and once more opened fire, not on
the seething black mass which was gathering at the end of the kraal, but on
fugitives who bethought them to climb the wall. I picked off several of
these men, moving down towards the end of the kraal as I did so, and
arriving at the corner, or rather the bend of the oval, in time to see, and
by means of my rifle to assist in, the mighty struggle that took place
there.

By this time some two hundred Masai -- allowing that we
had up to the present accounted for fifty -- had gathered together in front
of the thorn-stopped entrance, driven thither by the spears of Good's men,
whom they doubtless supposed were a large force instead of being but ten
strong. For some reason it never occurred to them to try and rush the
wall, which they could have scrambled over with comparative ease; they all
made for the fence, which was really a strongly interwoven fortification.
With a bound the first warrior went at it, and even before he touched the
ground on the other side I saw Sir Henry's great axe swing up and fall with
awful force upon his feather head-piece, and he sank into the middle of the
thorns. Then with a yell and a crash they began to break through as they
might, and ever as they came the great axe swung and Inkosi-kaas flashed
and they fell dead one by one, each man thus helping to build up a barrier
against his fellows. Those who escaped the axes of the pair fell at the
hands of the Askari and the two Mission Kaffirs, and those who passed
scatheless from them were brought low by my own and Mackenzie's fire.

Faster and more furious grew the fighting. Single Masai
would spring upon the dead bodies of their comrades, and engage one or
other of the axemen with their long spears; but, thanks chiefly to the mail
shirts, the result was always the same. Presently there was a great swing
of the axe, a crashing sound, and another dead Masai. That is, if the man
was engaged with Sir Henry. If it was Umslopogaas that he fought with the
result indeed would be the same, but it would be differently attained. It
was but rarely that the Zulu used the crashing double-handed stroke; on the
contrary, he did little more than tap continually at his adversary's head,
pecking at it with the pole-axe end of the axe as a woodpecker 7 pecks at rotten wood. Presently a peck would go
home, and his enemy would drop down with a neat little circular hole in his
forehead or skull, exactly similar to that which a cheese-scoop makes in a
cheese. He never used the broad blade of the axe except when hard pressed,
or when striking at a shield. He told me afterwards that he did not
consider it sportsmanlike.

Good and his men were quite close by now, and our people
had to cease firing into the mass for fear of killing some of them (as it
was, one of them was slain in this way). Mad and desperate with fear, the
Masai by a frantic effort burst through the thorn fence and piled-up dead,
and, sweeping Curtis, Umslopogaas, and the other three before them, into
the open. And now it was that we began to lose men fast. Down went our
poor Askari who was armed with the axe, a great spear standing out a foot
behind his back; and before long the two spearsmen who had stood with him
went down too, dying fighting like tigers; and others of our party shared
their fate. For a moment I feared the fight was lost -- certainly it
trembled in the balance. I shouted to my men to cast down their rifles,
and to take spears and throw themselves into the melee. They obeyed, their
blood being now thoroughly up, and Mr Mackenzie's people followed their
example.

This move had a momentary good result, but still the
fight hung in the balance.

Our people fought magnificently, hurling themselves upon
the dark mass of Elmoran, hewing, thrusting, slaying, and being slain. And
ever above the din rose Good's awful yell of encouragement as he plunged to
wherever the fight was thickest; and ever, with an almost machine-like
regularity, the two axes rose and fell, carrying death and disablement at
every stroke. But I could see that the strain was beginning to tell upon
Sir Henry, who was bleeding from several flesh wounds: his breath was
coming in gasps, and the veins stood out on his forehead like blue and
knotted cords. Even Umslopogaas, man of iron that he was, was hard
pressed. I noticed that he had given up 'woodpecking', and was now using
the broad blade of Inkosi-kaas, 'browning' his enemy wherever he could hit
him, instead of drilling scientific holes in his head. I myself did not go
into the melee, but hovered outside like the swift 'back' in a football
scrimmage, putting a bullet through a Masai whenever I got a chance. I was
more use so. I fired forty-nine cartridges that morning, and I did not
miss many shots.

Presently, do as we would, the beam of the balance began
to rise against us. We had not more than fifteen or sixteen effectives
left now, and the Masai had at least fifty. Of course if they had kept
their heads, and shaken themselves together, they could soon have made an
end of the matter; but that is just what they did not do, not having yet
recovered from their start, and some of them having actually fled from
their sleeping-places without their weapons. Still by now many individuals
were fighting with their normal courage and discretion, and this alone was
sufficient to defeat us. To make matters worse just then, when Mackenzie's
rifle was empty, a brawny savage armed with a 'sime', or sword, made a rush
for him. The clergyman flung down his gun, and drawing his huge carver
from his elastic belt (his revolver had dropped out in the fight), they
closed in desperate struggle. Presently, locked in a close embrace,
missionary and Masai rolled on the ground behind the wall, and for some
time I, being amply occupied with my own affairs, and in keeping my skin
from being pricked, remained in ignorance of his fate or how the duel had
ended.

To and fro surged the fight, slowly turning round like
the vortex of a human whirlpool, and the matter began to look very bad for
us. Just then, however, a fortunate thing happened. Umslopogaas, either
by accident or design, broke out of the ring and engaged a warrior at some
few paces from it. As he did so, another man ran up and struck him with
all his force between his shoulders with his great spear, which, falling on
the tough steel shirt, failed to pierce it and rebounded. For a moment the
man stared aghast -- protective armour being unknown among these tribes --
and then he yelled out at the top of his voice --

'They are devils -- bewitched, bewitched!' And
seized by a sudden panic, he threw down his spear, and began to fly. I cut
short his career with a bullet, and Umslopogaas brained his man, and then
the panic spread to the others.

'Bewitched, bewitched!' they cried, and tried to
escape in every direction, utterly demoralized and broken-spirited, for the
most part even throwing down their shields and spears.

On the last scene of that dreadful fight I need not
dwell. It was a slaughter great and grim, in which no quarter was asked or
given. One incident, however, is worth detailing. Just as I was hoping
that it was all done with, suddenly from under a heap of slain where he had
been hiding, an unwounded warrior sprang up, and, clearing the piles of
dying dead like an antelope, sped like the wind up the kraal towards the
spot where I was standing at the moment. But he was not alone, for
Umslopogaas came gliding on his tracks with the peculiar swallow-like
motion for which he was noted, and as they neared me I recognized in the
Masai the herald of the previous night. Finding that, run as he would, his
pursuer was gaining on him, the man halted and turned round to give battle.
Umslopogaas also pulled up.

'Ah, ah,' he cried, in mockery, to the Elmoran, 'it is
thou whom I talked with last night -- the Lygonani! the Herald! the
capturer of little girls -- he who would kill a little girl! And thou
didst hope to stand man to man and face to face with Umslopogaas, an Induna
of the tribe of the Maquilisini, of the people of the Amazulu? Behold, thy
prayer is granted! And I didst swear to hew thee limb from limb, thou
insolent dog. Behold, I will do it even now!'

The Masai ground his teeth with fury, and charged at the
Zulu with his spear. As he came, Umslopogaas deftly stepped aside, and
swinging Inkosi-kaas high above his head with both hands, brought the broad
blade down with such fearful force from behind upon the Masai's shoulder
just where the neck is set into the frame, that its razor edge shore right
through bone and flesh and muscle, almost severing the head and one arm
from the body.

'Ou!' ejaculated Umslopogaas, contemplating the
corpse of his foe; 'I have kept my word. It was a good stroke.'